Hotel Packages

Hotel Packages

Several Chicago-area hotels are offering special VIP packages that include tickets to see Opening the Vaults: Wonders of the 1893 World’s Fair, showing only at The Field Museum from October 25, 2013 – September 7, 2014.

With convenient locations, these hotels offer wonderful amenities and a range of options to suit every budget. Call each hotel for the details of specific packages, which may also include such benefits as complimentary breakfast, fitness center privileges, in-room treats, and valet parking.

To offer you maximum flexibility during your stay, VIP Hotel Guest Tickets to see Opening the Vaults: Wonders of the 1893 World’s Fair, which is a timed-entry exhibition, can be used on any day of your visit without having to call ahead. For a list of participating hotels, please view our Hotel Packages.

Presenting Chicago to the World

As soon as Congress awarded Chicago the Fair in 1890, planning began. Chicago architect Daniel Burnham and New York landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted led the Fair’s design and construction.

The Fair’s Dedication Day took place on October 21, 1892. Intended to honor Columbus’s arrival in America in 1492, planning and building delays pushed opening back a year to May 1, 1893.

During its six-month run, the Fair welcomed over 25 million visitors—almost half of America’s population at a time when its citizens numbered around 67 million!

Winners at the World’s Fair

Fairgoers could travel the whole world in a visit, although guidebooks suggested at least two weeks to see all 65,000 exhibits.

Though the Fair was intended to be educational, nearly everything was for sale. Prizes were awarded to outstanding exhibitors, prompting innovation and product development. Pabst Blue Ribbon beer is a well-known award recipient.

Another big winner was Ward’s Natural Science Establishment, which still supplies universities and museums with scientific material. The Field Museum’s first large purchase at the end of the Fair was Ward’s entire display of animal taxidermy, fossils, gems, and meteorites—bought for $95,000.

Endangerment & Extinction

The Passenger Pigeon was one of the most abundant birds in the 19th century. But by 1893, it was rapidly disappearing from the wild even as laws were enacted to protect it. Within two decades of the Fair, the species became extinct due to unrestricted hunting and loss of natural habitat.

The population of many other North American birds represented at the Fair—such as the Snowy Egret, a popular decoration on women’s hats—also declined frighteningly, until America’s first enforced wildlife preservation act helped pull them back from the brink of extinction.

Paving the Way for Preservation

Study specimens from the Fair are part of The Field Museum’s earliest collections. They now help scientists in ways unimaginable in the 1890s:

Specimens from the Fair's time period—a lemur and a howler monkey—recently helped inform the two most comprehensive books on primate studies.

DNA taken from our earliest Peregrine Falcon specimen has helped reveal that repopulating this endangered species has led to greater diversity than ever before.

The Fair’s specimens of coral have shown that species with certain structures are more susceptible to the bleaching that results from climate change.

Gathering Global Goods

Some of the objects from the Fair—such as a lace shawl made from tree bark and a skirt made of coconut fiber—may seem odd, if not downright uncomfortable. But they tell us about the late 19th century, an era of colonialism that provided access to new lands and unfamiliar plants.

In 1893, these objects show that Fair exhibitors were more interested in what could be made out of the world’s plants than in plant diversity and conservation. But at the close of the Fair, exhibitors donated or sold many of their displays to the new Museum, which later broadened its mission to include preserving plant species and habitats.

Meteorite Myths & More

When it fell, the Fair’s famous Ensisheim meteorite was thought to be a good omen and was kept in a church and blessed.

But the Elbogen meteorite, another Fair marvel, was instead considered a wicked thing when it fell. One legend claims that it was shackled in a castle dungeon to keep it from flying away.

Recent studies of the Fair’s Brenham meteorite have revealed it to be a fragment of an asteroid’s interior—a rare type of meteorite.

Mining & Mineral Wealth

In the 1870s, coal-mining operations in Northeast Illinois unearthed a mother load of fossil plants and animals: the Mazon Creek assemblage. At the Fair, multitudes of these fossils—thought to form coal— highlighted the mining industry.

Companies and private collectors also displayed coal from Pennsylvania, clay from Illinois, quartz from Colorado, and gold from California.

The new Museum received many things from the Fair’s Mines and Mining Building, including the Mines, Mining, and Metallurgy Department’s Chief, Frederick Skiff, who became the Museum’s first director after the Fair.

Life as a “Native Display”

Sixty Labrador Inuit lived in a village on the fairgrounds as an anthropology exhibit. Visitors watched them perform “native” tasks in traditional fur garments—stifling during the hot Chicago summer.

The Inuit had been recruited for the Fair with promises of rations and a better life. But increasingly poor treatment—like lack of fresh water and low-quality food—prompted them to take action.

Members of the group filed suit against organizers, left the village, and set up their own paid exhibit outside the Fair’s gates.

A Merchandising Mogul Funds a Museum

As the Fair drew to a close, a popular campaign to commemorate it with a museum surged. On September 16, 1893, the Columbian Museum of Chicago was chartered amidst a flurry of activity.

Bolstered by a $1 million contribution (more than $26 million in today’s currency) from department store mogul Marshall Field, a group of wealthy Chicago businessmen set out to create a museum.

Over the last 120 years, we’ve steadily added to the original World’s Fair objects, and Field Museum scientists continue to conduct groundbreaking research on the ever-growing collection.

Gamelan Instrument

These tiger-lions adorn the saron, a xylophone-like instrument. It’s one of 24 instruments that were once part of the Fair’s Javanese gamelan ensemble.

Within the Wonders of the 1893 World’s Fair, you can listen to a recording of gamelan music played by the people who lived in the Fair’s reconstructed Javanese Village. And you can create your own music on the Fair’s historic gamelan at a nearby touch-table.

The Fair’s Ferris Wheel

The Fair covered 630 acres, including Chicago’s Jackson Park and the Midway Plaisance—a narrow strip of land designated as an amusement area. The Midway skyline was dominated by the 250-foot Ferris wheel, designed by engineer George Ferris.

The famed wheel may have been an engineering marvel and the largest attraction; but it wasn’t the most groundbreaking innovation at the Fair. New technologies such as alternating current and the electric light bulb—used throughout the grounds at night—made the Fair the largest user of electricity in the 19th century.

Meet the Father of Modern Taxidermy

Among the Fair’s many taxidermy displays, Carl Akeley’s were exceptional. The Museum’s first zoology curator took notice and hired Akeley as Chief Taxidermist. In 1896, during Akeley’s first collecting trip to Africa for the Museum, he had to use his bare hands to kill a leopard that attacked him.

Akeley transformed taxidermy from the practice of stuffing skins with straw to a process that included mounting skins over life-like sculptures. The elephants in the Museum’s main hall are an example of his work.

Herbarium Specimen Sheet

As the Fair closed, esteemed botanist Charles Millspaugh gathered exhibits for the new Museum and became the first botany curator. He immediately went into the field, setting the course for our botany collections.

The stamp seen here on his herbarium sheet—the method botanists use to preserve plants—notes the Columbian Museum of Chicago, a name the Museum possessed only briefly before it opened to the public.

Elmer Riggs & Brachiosaurus Bones

Initially thought to be from a large Brontosaurus, the huge femur (thighbone) in the plaster cast on the left is actually from Brachiosaurus, a dinosaur discovered by Elmer Riggs (center). He declared it the “largest dinosaur ever known.”

In addition to collecting specimens like this one for the Museum after the Fair closed (the Fair displayed no real dinosaur bones), Riggs carried out research that shaped the field of paleontology. He’s credited with removing Brontosaurus, the name given to a misidentified Apatosaurus, from dinosaur vocabulary.

Viewing the Penobscot Indian Village

Fair visitors could observe Native peoples from all over North America, Africa, the Pacific Islands, and several other exotic places. These exhibits allowed visitors to “travel” to distant and unfamiliar lands with the understanding of “to see is to know.”

However, these exhibits gave an oversimplified view of cultural groups and reinforced cultural differences and stereotypes. They often encouraged judgment by presenting people as “lesser” human beings.

Opening Day at The Field Museum

The Field Columbian Museum, known today as The Field Museum, opened in the former Palace of Fine Arts building in Jackson Park on June 2, 1894.

It wasn’t until 1905 that the Museum was organized into the natural history museum you know today. In 1921, the Museum moved from its original location on the fairgrounds to its current location in Chicago’s South Loop.